The vanishing point of history - Centre d`art et photographie de

Transcription

The vanishing point of history - Centre d`art et photographie de
L’étéphotographiquedeLectoure2015.Dossierdepresse.
L’Été photographique
de Lectoure
The vanishing point of history
Press release
L’étéphotographiquedeLectoure2015.Pressrelease.
Summary
L’été photographique, 2015
Curator’s introduction : Catsou Roberts
p.3
L’été photographique. The vanishing point of history
p.4
Artists
p.5
Larry Achiampong
p.6
David Blandy
p.6
Bertille Bak
p.7
Eric Baudelaire
p.7
David Birkin
p.8
Matthew Buckingham
p.8
Sarah Dobai
p.9
Mounir Fatmi
p.9
Joachim Koester
p.10
Rä di Martino
p.10
Melik Ohanian
p.11
Uriel Orlow
p.11
Marco Poloni
p.12
Hans Rosenström
p.12
Lina Selander
p.13
Venues
p.14
Inauguration and events
p.15
Le Centre d’art et photographie de Lectoure
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Practicalinformation
Dates, times, prices
p.17
Access
p.18
Accomodation and restaurants
p.19
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Introduction
Catsou Roberts is curator from New York, living in London since 1998.
Currently working with Vital Arts, she commissions site-specific work for the public areas
of several London hospitals within Barts Health NHS Trust. She recently realised projects
with Roger Hiorns, Richard Wentworth, Hurvin Anderson, Cornelia Baltes among others.
Previously, Roberts was Senior Curator at Arnolfini in Bristol where she curated
monographic shows by Victor Burgin, Michael Snow, Vito Acconci, Liam Gillick and
Jonathan Monk, as well as several thematic shows, including Presentness is Grace :
Experiencing the Suspended Moment ; Duchamp’s Suitcase ; Trouble Shooting ; Vague but
True. Before joining Arnolfini, Roberts curated free lance exhibitions which explored issues
of narrative, fiction and dramatisation, including Narrative Urge (in 1997 with Victor
Burgin, Pierre Huyghe, Sarah Morris and others) ; Perfect Speed (in 1994 with Douglas
Gordon, Fiona Banner, Sam Taylor-Wood among others) ; Fiction + Interference : Assorted
Confabulations.
She has written extensively and has frequently served as a visiting lecturer at Goldsmiths,
Birkbeck, Slade School, Central Saint Martins, Royal Danish Academy, Konstfack,
Stockholm Fine Art Academy Helsinki, Kunsthogskoken Bergen, Trondheim Academy of
Fine Art, and IUAV di Venezia, among others.
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The Vanishing Point of History
The past carries with it a temporal index by which it is referred to redemption. There is a
secret agreement between past generations and the present one.
Walter Benjamin, Theses on the Philosophy of History
According to Walter Benjamin, the vanishing point of history doesn't reside in a distant
past, but rather in the present. He describes this vanishing point of history as always being
the present moment, which is a reversal of the conventional notion of history receding
somewhere behind us, as if disappearing into a nonexistent time.
Many of the artworks in L’Été photographique revisit historical events in order to consider
what is occurring now. This interest in history and historiography emanates from a desire
to understand the present and find meaning within it. Socially engaged artists trying to
make sense of the present, will turn to the past. They know that by understanding history,
we might be better able to change the future.
Like Benjamin’s view of the historian, many contemporary artists “grasps the constellation
which his own era has formed with a definite earlier one. Thus he establishes a conception
of the present as the time of the now” in an attempt to consider current issues and
realities.
L’Été photographique brings together several international artists who investigate history
and its representations. In doing so, they force us to confront history as a construction,
interspersed with absences and omissions. Artists in the exhibition take as their raw
material particular historical events, activities and figures that have been eclipsed, hidden
or forgotten over time. Themes of stealth, neglect and obfuscation run throughout the
exhibition. All the works are united by a shared interest in episodes, figures or objects that
have been lost, suppressed or overshadowed.
Visitors to the exhibition will encounter abandoned houses; stranded marines; a plant
driven into extinction; fictitious war machines; clandestine activities; unsung heroes; a
stolen cloak; lost transcripts; unidentifiable images; secret editorial tactics; an unmade
film, vanished manuscripts and a whole host of other stories from the past.
Many artists in the exhibition draw on found images and archival material, while others
invent new visual vocabularies to analyse the past. All the works are based on extensive
research and an engagement with history. Offering bold insights, these works are poetic,
often humorous, and always ladened with meaning.
L’Été photographique includes still photography as well as moving images—projected, on
monitors, and even in virtual reality googles. At the same time, the exhibition includes
sculpture, installations and sound work, showing a range of lens-based art, and providing
a rich and varied experience for the viewer. The project unfolds across several venues in
Lectoure, offering visitors the double pleasure of discovering architecture as well as art.
These different sites are as diverse as the works : from an ancient stone cottage, a 16th
century episcopal palace, classrooms of a children’s school, a cavernous colonnaded
market hall, to the art centre itself housed in a 19th century chaplaincy.
Catsou Roberts
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LarryAchiampong
BertilleBak
DavidBlandy
EricBaudelaire
DavidBirkin
MatthewBuckingham
SarahDobai
MounirFatmi
JoachimKoester
RädiMartino
MelikOhanian
UrielOrlow
HansRosenström
MarcoPoloni
LinaSelander
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LarryAchiampong
Larry Achiampong (British-Ghanian, born in 1984)
Achiampong has shown his works at Tate Britain, London / Tate
Modern, London / Documenta 13 / Institute for International
Visual Arts (Iniva), London / ICA, London / Victoria & Albert
Museum, London / Southbank Centre, London / Oxford Museum
of Art / David Roberts Art Foundation (DRAF), London /
Serpentine Gallery, London.
More information on the artist’s site.
Larry Achiampong, Glyth, Digital montage, 2013-2014
DavidBlandy
David Blandy (British, born in 1976)
Blandy has shown his work in numerous exhibitions and screenings in London, including at the
Serpentine Gallery / Tate Britain / Whitechapel Gallery / ICA / Barbican / Iniva / Gasworks / Southbank
Centre / Courtauld Institute of Art / Jerwood, Sadler’s Wells / Victoria & Albert Museum / Bloomberg
Space / Freud Museum, as well as around the UK at BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead
/ Modern Art Oxford / 2008 Liverpool Biennial / Dundee Contemporary Arts / Grizedale Arts, Coniston
/ Spike Island, Bristol / Cornerhouse, Manchester / Turner Contemporary, Margate. He has also exhibited
internationally, including at China Project Space, Beijing / Kunsthall Bergen, Norway / Théâtre Royal de
Marrakech / Stadtgalerie, Bern, Switzerland / Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki
/ Kunstverein Braunschweig, Germany / Soros Center for Contemporary Art - Almaty, Kazakstan / Witte
de With Gallery, Rotterdam / Museum of Contemporary Art, Shanghai / PS1 Gallery, New York / Centre
d’art Contemporain, Geneva / Modern Art Museum of Bahia, Brazil among many other venues.
More information on the artist’s site.
In their newest work, Finding Fanon, which will be premiered in this
exhibition, Larry Achiampong and David Bandy, are inspired by the
lost plays of Frantz Fanon, (1925-1961) a politically radical
humanist whose practice dealt with the psychopathology of
colonisation and the social and cultural consequences of
decolonisation. In the film, the two artists negotiate Fanon’s ideas,
examining the politics of race, racism and the post-colonial, and
how these societal issues affect their relationship. Their conflict is
played out through a script that melds found texts and personal
testimony, transposing their drama to a junkyard houseboat at
an unspecified time in the future. Navigating the past, present
and future, Achiampong and Blandy question the promise of
globalisation, recognising its impact on their own heritage.
Larry Achiampong et David Blandy, Finding
Fanon, hd video, 2015
Larry Achaimpong will also be exhibiting works from an on-going series. His work uses live performance,
imagery and sound to explore representations of identity in the post-digital age and recently drew on
the Bokoor African Popular Music Foundation archives to explore the history of "Highlife” music (From
Ghana) of the 1960s. Highlife was associated with African local aristocracy during the colonial period,
and was described as a collage - of traditional African music to the colonial brass band music, singing
hymns and church music.
Supported by Arts Council England
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BertilleBak
Bertille Bak (French, born in 1983)
Bak has been the subject of monographic shows at Palais de Tokyo, Paris / Musée d’art moderne de la
Ville de Paris / Le Plateau FRAC, Paris / Grand Café, Saint-Nazaire. She has also shown her work at
the Villa Arson, Nice / Centre Pompidou, Paris / Kunstverein Wolfburg / Palazzo Grassi, Venice.
Bertille Bak also poetically blends documentation and
dramatisation. Yet, her work pulls the theme of the exhibition
into a different direction. Rather than dealing with a forgotten
figure or episode in history, her work aims to reveal the hidden
realities of today. Le tour de Babel looks at the unhappy lives of
sailors exploited by the cruise industry. The very absence of the
men themselves on camera — a reluctance on their part driven
by fear for their jobs — renders them akin to phantoms, and
resonates with sense of neglected issues and unearthed
injustices found in other works in the exhibition.
Works have been shown in 2014 in the Grand Café at Saint
Nazaire, see views of the exhibition.
Bertille Bak, Le Tour de Babel, 2014, Vidéo, 19mn52,
16-9 Stéréo, Crédit photographique Bertille Bak,
courtesy Galerie Xippas, 2015
EricBaudelaire
Éric Baudelaire (French, born in 1973)
Baudelaire has previously exhibited in L’été photographique de Lectoure in 2007 as well as at 8e Taipei
Biennale / Yokohama Triennale, Japan / Baltic Triennial of International Art, Lithuania / Mois de la Photo,
Montréal and in group shows at SeMA Biennale Mediacity, Camera Austria, Graz / Museum of Modern
Art, Tokyo / FRAC Lorraine, Metz / Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto / MACBA, Barcelona / Centre de la
photographie, Genève / Fondation Ricard, Paris / Palais de Tokyo, Paris / Haus der Kulturen der Welt,
Berlin / Transmission Gallery, Glasgow / Le Plateau, FRAC Île de France / Centre Photographique d’Île
de France (CPIF), Pontault-Combault / Casino Luxembourg / Centre Pompidou, Paris / FRAC Auvergne.
His works are in held in the following collections, Whitney Museum of American Art / Centre Pompidou,
MACBA / Barcelona / Fonds National d’Art Contemporain / FRAC Auvergne.
While Achiampong and Blandy consider plays that were
purportedly lost, Eric Baudelaire considers a film that was never
made. The starting point of his film is a book by Michelangelo
Antonioni, entitled That Bowling Alley on the Tiber, containing
scripts and scenarios that the Italian filmmaker deemed
“unmakeable.” The Makes is presented as a staged interview
with Philippe Azure, a specialist on Antonioni and film critic for
Libération. In it, Azure discusses a remake of a non-existent film
from Antonioni’s non-existent 'Japanese period’.
See an extract of The makes and more information on the
artist’s site.
Eric Baudelaire, The Makes, 2009, HD video, colour,
sound, 27mins, Courtesy of Eric Baudelaire and LUX,
London
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DavidBirkin
David Birkin (British, born in 1977)
Birkin had a solo exhibition at The Mosaic Rooms in London in 2015, and
included in several group shows, including at MUDAM Musée d’art moderne,
Luxembourg / FotoFest, Houston / MoMA PS1, New York / Museo Centrale
Montemartini, Rome / Photographers’Gallery, London / Saatchi Gallery,
London / ICA, London / Tallinna Kunstihoone, Estonia / Barbican Centre,
London / Courtauld Institute of Art, London/ Baibakov Art Projects, Moscow.
David Birkin’s Iconographies are a series of press portraits of Cold War era
David Birkin, Iconographies, 2013,
political, military and religious leaders, including Fidel Castro, Ayatollah Courtesy of the artist and a-political
Khomeini, and Yasser Arafat. Each shows the original crop marks, annotations
and notes drawn over the images by the newspaper editor. These attempt to manipulate the printed
image —and, in turn, to manipulate the reader’s perception—make visible the hidden agenda of the media.
Another work by Birkin includes goggles equipped with a video showing the 1972 European Cup football
final between West Germany and the USSR. Along side it, lays a transcript of a declassified Nato training
exercise from the same period.
David Birkin’s work is presented courtesy of a/political, London. More information on the artist’s site.
MatthewBuckingham
Matthew Buckingham (American, born in 1963)
Buckingham has had numerous solo exhibitions throughout Europe
and the United States including at Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung
Ludwig, Vienne / Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin / Brooklyn Museum,
New York / Camden Art Centre, London / Museo Nacional Centro de
Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid / Museum of Fine Arts, Houston / Frac
Bourgogne, Dijon / P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York / Art
Institute of Chicago. His work has been part of exhibitions in l’ARC /
Musée d’art moderne de la Ville de Paris / Whitney Museum, New Matthew Buckingham, 1720, film 16mm
York / Museum of Modern Art, New York / Kunst-Werke, Berlin / couleur et son en boucle, 2009
Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienne / Whitechapel Gallery / Corcoran
Gallery of Art, Washington / Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago / Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol among
others.
Matthew Buckingham has treated the life of a forgotten slave in his film, Amos Fortune Road while other
work considered the indigenous people of New York, and the establishment of the first English
dictionary. For his film, 1720, Buckingham has delved into the history of printing, Bach’s Sonata in G
Major which he brings together for a meditation on 16 mm film. William Caslon is the little known figure
behind the first font of English origin. He began producing the typeface in London in 1720. As the first
moveable type produced in England, it ended British dependence on Dutch and French typefaces and
helped to modernise book design. In the same year, J. S. Bach is thought to have written the Sonata in
Germany. The length of the Sonata’s third movement coincides with the running-time for a 100-foot roll
of 16mm film. As Buckingham has written, “The film becomes an intersection between aural and visual
artefacts that share a common date of origin but are otherwise contingent.”
More information on the artist’s site.
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SarahDobai
Sarah Dobai (British, born in 1965)
Dobai has been part of group exhibitions at Tate Modern, London /
Whitechapel Gallery, London / Centre National de la Photographie,
Paris / Foto Museum, Antwerp / Foto Museum Winterthur, Zurich /
ICA, London / Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol / Vancouver Art Gallery,
Canada / Espace Croisé, Roubaix. She has been in group exhibitions
at the Hayward Gallery, London / Camerawork, London/ Kettles
Yard, Cambridge / Artists Space, New York / Musée d’art
contemporain de Saint Jacques de Compostelle, Spain.
The sense of loss is a predominate theme in the exhibition.
Achiampong and Blandy’s film about Fanon’s missing plays and
Sarah Dobai, The Overcoat - King Mirror, 2014
Selander’s meditation on an extinct plant are examples, as is Sarah
Dobai series of photographs which take as a starting point Nikolai Gogol’s short story, The Overcoat.
The melancholic 19th c tale focuses on the loss of a beloved and hard-earned garment. The theft of the
overcoat, and its devastating effect on a devoted and tireless worker, is translated by Dobai into an
investigation of contemporary consumer culture. Stolen objects also figure in a new performance by
Dobai, commissioned specifically for this exhibition. The performance, which will premiere in Lectoure,
is based on Robert Bresson’s influential film, Pickpocket, and it explores the use of trickery and
illusionism in historical or economic contexts.
More information on the artist’s site.
MounirFatmi
Mounir Fatmi (Morrocan, born in 1970)
In 2015 Fatmi had a solo exhibition at Mamco, Geneva and
Prison Qara in Morocco, as well as group shows at the
Brooklyn Museum, Sharjah Museum as part of the Jameel
Prize 3, and the 16th International Media Art Biennial WRO,
Wroclaw, among others. Previous monographic shows include
at Migros Museum für Gegenwarstkunst, Zürich / Musée
Picasso / Centre d’art contemporain le Parvis / Fondazione
Collegio San Carlo, Modène / Fondation AK Bank, Istanbul /
Mounir Fatmi, As a black man, 2013-2014, serie of 10 CMuseum Kunst Palast, Düsseldorf. He has been included in Prints, 60 x 40 cm, exhibition view from CCC, Tours,
several group exhibitions including at Centre Georges 2014.
Pompidou, Paris / Brooklyn Museum, New York / N.B.K.,
Berlin / Musée d’art Mori, Tokyo / Museum on the Seam, Jerusalem / Museum of Modern Art, Moscow /
Hayward Gallery, London / Art Gallery of Western Australia / Victoria & Albert Museum, London.
Another neglected and forgotten figure features in Mounir Fatmi’s As a Black Man. In the series of ten
photos, Fatmi considers John Howard Griffin, a white Civil Rights activist who tried to integrate into the
African American community by chemically changing his skin colour. After being ostracised and
receiving death threats from conservative whites in the American South, he eventually fell into obscurity
and died in abject poverty.
More information on the artist’s site.
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JoachimKoester
Joachim Koester (Danish, born in 1962)
Koester has been the subject of numerous monographic show, including at
Palais de Tokyo, Paris / Camera Austria, Graz / Centre d’Art Contemporain,
Genève / Yerba Buena Center for Arts, San Francisco / S.M.A.K., Gand / MIT
Liste Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, USA / Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol / Institut
d’art contemporain, Villeurbanne. Previously, he was included in Documenta
10 / Kunst-werke Berlin / Centre National de la Photographie, Paris / Witte de
With, Rotterdam / Tate Britain, London. He represented Denmark for the
2005 Venice Biennal.
Joachim Koester, Some boarded up
house serie, 2012
Joachim Koester has developed a body of work that is situated between
documentation and dramatisation. His different works reveal a particular interest in the mystery
surrounding forgotten historical episodes, as well as the occult, such as The Magic Mirror of John Dee,
which documents the “magic mirror” of an obscure English mathematician and astrologist of the 16th
century. Presented in this exhibition are works from his series, Some Boarded Up Houses. Each black
and white image features a single house whose sealed windows and doors speak of interrupted lives and
evacuated families. These depopulated homes are charged with ghostly evocations, while making
obvious reference to Bernd and Hilla Becher's celebrated typologies.
See an interview of the artist made by the Palais de Tokyo.
With the courtesy of Nicolas Cattelain.
RädiMartino
Rä di Martino (Italian, born in 1975)
Di Martino has had solo exhibitions at Museion, Bolzano, Italy
/ MAXX Project, Sierre, Switzerland / Fondazione Sandretto,
Turin / Monitor Gallery, Rome / Festival Les Urbaines,
Lausanne. Her works have also been presented at Tate Modern,
London / 52e Venice Biennale / PS1, New York / Manifesta 7,
Italy / Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago/ Bronx Museum /
MUMA, Melbourne / Palazzo Grassi, Venice / Fondazione
Trussardi, Milan / Palazzo Strozzi, Florence / ICA, London /
Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid. Her works are in several
collections, including Deutsche Bank, Nomas Foundation,
Galleria d’Art Moderna, Bologne, MACRO, Rome.
Rä di Martino, Authentic News of Invisible Things, 2014, HD
Video, extrait de la video, Courtesy Copperfield Gallery
Another strong theme running through the exhibition, is that of the clandestine, as exemplified by Rä di
Martino’s Authentic News of Invisible Things in which di Martino considers the use of “dummy tanks” in
modern warfare. These decoys, usually inflatable rubber or lightweight wooden structures, have been
employed by armies to give the false impression of greater military presence, when viewed from the
air—from planes, helicopters, drones and satellites. Rä di Martino as delved into the history of these
obfuscating tactics and draws on archival images to create comical photo collages. Authentic News of
Invisible Things also includes a film inspired by archive footage taken in the French City of Lille in 1918
which depicts a group of civilians gathered around a fake tank abandoned by the retreating German
army.
More information on the artist’s site.
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MelikOhanian
Melik Ohanian (French, born in 1969)
Ohanian has been nominated for this year's Prix Marcel
Duchamp, and is included in the 2015 Venice Biennal in
Armenia's national pavilion which won the Golden Lion
award. He has been the subject of several solo exhibitions
including in the 2015 Venice Biennal and has been the subject of
several solo exhibitions including Palais de Tokyo, Paris / Musée
d’Art Moderne, Saint-Etienne / Museum in Progress, Vienne /
FRAC Languedoc-Roussillon, Montpellier / CRAC Languedoc- Melik Ohanian, Selected Recordings, 2000, courtesy
de l’artiste et galerie Chantal Crousel
Roussillon, Sète / Centre Pompidou, Paris / De Appel,
Amsterdam / South London Gallery, London / CCA Kitakyushu,
Japan / Lunds Konsthall, Sweden / IAC Villeurbanne / Mumbai Art Room / ArtPace, San Antonio, Texas /
Centre pour l’image contemporaine, Geneva.
While not driven by historical narratives, Melik Ohanian’s series of photographs, entitled Selected
Recordings, are also surrounded by mystery and the sense of abandonment. These large format colour
photographs belong to an ongoing and open ended series, begun in 2000. Each unique image has neither
title, nor date nor any geographical information to identify it. A makeshift grave, an unfinished
motorway, a forgotten portrait of an unidentified person in an empty room, a decaying bird, an erased
face, are just some of the images that all add up to collection of indicators of neglect, loss, and failed
undertakings.
Also presented is Ohanian’s film, September 11, 1973 -Santiago, Chile, 2007, which focuses on the 1973
coup d’état led by Pinochet and draws on the soundtrack of Patricio Guzman’s documentary film shot in
1973.
More information on the artist’s site.
UrielOrlow
Uriel Orlow (Swiss, born in 1973)
In 2015, Orlow had a monographic show at John Hansard Gallery in
Southhampton, UK, and he will be included in exhibitions at CAPC,
Bordeaux / CAC, Vilnius / Palais de Tokyo. Previously, his work
were presented at Tate Britain / 54th Venice Biennale / Centre
Photographique d’Ile de France (CPIF) Pontault-Combaut /
Whitechapel Gallery, London / CIC, Cairo / Kunstahlle, Budapest /
Jewish Museum, New York / Museum of Contemporary
Photography Chicago, among others.
Uriel Orlow, The Short and the Long of it, 2010-
The starting point for Uriel Orlow’s The Short and the Long of It is 2011, Collection Frac Aquitaine,Uriel Orlow,photo
a remarkable episode that has fallen out of official history. It is the Jean-Christophe Garcia.Vue de l’exposition Au loin
story of fourteen international cargo ships stranded on the Suez une île, 2011, au Frac Aquitaine.
Canal for eight years. Blocked at the outbreak of the Six-Day War
in June 1967 they were unable to leave until 1975. The ensuing camaraderie between the men from
different countries and the establishment of a social system is the subject of his work.
Uriel Orlow’s works are loaned by the FRAC Aquitaine.
More information on the artist’s site.
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MarcoPoloni
Marco Poloni (Italian-Swiss, born in 1962)
Poloni has exhibited at Centre de la photographie, Geneva /
Kunsthalle, Berne / Fotohof, Salzburg / Kunstverein Freiburg /
Centre pour l’image contemporaine, Geneva / Photography
museum, Braunschweig / Campagne Première, Berlin. His work
has also featured in the 51st Venice Biennale / Centre culturel
suisse, Paris / Fotohof, Salzbourg / Camera Austria, Graz /
DEPO, Istanbul / Bregenzer Kunstverein / Brandenburgischer
Kunstverein, Potsdam.
Marco Poloni, The pistol of Monika Ertl, 2013, Revolver,
side view (Hamburg police photograph) © Marco Poloni et
Campagne Première Berlin
The themes of stealth and shrouded history continue in Marco
Poloni’s installation The Pistol of Monika Ertl, which is part of a series of works investigating the
enigmatic figure of Giangiacomo Feltrinelli. The Italian business man became a clandestine left-wing
activist after WWII and was best known for publishing Pasternak’s Dr Zhivago when the manuscript was
smuggled out of the Soviet Union. This work is part of Poloni’s attempt to explore many of the radical
social and political ideas that emerged in the 60s and 70s. It focuses on the murder of a Bolivian diplomat
who was responsible for Che Guevara’s execution. The pistol in the title of the work was given to Monika
Ertl to avenge Che Guevara by Feltrinelli—who himself died in mysterious circumstances.
More information on the artist’s site.
HansRosenström
Hans Rosenström (Finnish, born in 1978)
Rosenström has had several exhibitions in Finland and Sweden,
including Helsinki Contemporary and SINNE in Helsinki and The
Studio in Moderna Museet of Stockholm. He has also been included
in group exhibitions at Palais de Tokyo, Paris / Cranbrook Art
Museum, USA / Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah, EAU / KIASMA,
Helsinki / Bonniers Konsthall, Sweden. He has also been part of the
/ 6th Biennale Momentum, Moss, Norway / Biennale of Young
Artists Tallinn.
Hans Rosenstrom, In goof faith, installation, 2013
Hans Rosentröm’s work also references a loss—the transcript of Pasolini’s last public appearance. In
1975, just days before his brutal murder, the filmmaker presented Salò, or the 100 Days of Sodom at the
Italian Cultural Institute in Stockholm. In Good Faith features a small photograph of the stage where the
presentation took place, along with a loudspeaker and microphone. The loudspeaker repeatedly plays a
voice reading the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. With each repetition, the microphone
records the live ambient sound occurring around the installed artwork. This new recording is, in turn,
played through the loudspeakers as layers of sound are built up into an eventual cacophony.
More information on the artist’s site.
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LinaSelander
Lina Selander (Swedish, born in 1973)
Lina Selander is representing Sweden for the 2015
Venice Biennal. In 2016 she will have solo exhibitions in
Sweden at the Moderna Museet, Stockholm/ Goteborg
Konsthall/ Lidkoping Konsthall. Previously she had
monographic shows at Iniva, London / Kunsthall
Trondheim, Norway / La Gaîté lyrique, Paris /
Bielefelder Kunstverein, Berlin / Index, Stockholm, and
has been included in groups shows at Haus des Kulturen
der Welt, Berlin / Centre Pompidou, Paris among
others.
Lina Selander, Sylphium, extraits du film, 2014
With Silphium, Lina Selander has undertaken extensive research to address the loss of a crucial harvest.
Her film tells the story of a plant, silphium, used in ancient Greece and its eventual extinction. The
importance of the crop to the economy of the ancient city of Cyrene, in North Africa where it flourished,
was so crucial, that the image of a stalk of silphium was printed onto the coins. When over cultivation of
the plant drove it into extinction, the city declined.
Made with Oscar Mangione.
More information on the artist’s site.
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Exhibitions sites
L’été photographique is also an opportunity to discover
the five different venues across which the exhibition unfolds —
each of them with their own particular identity. From the
spectacular space of the Grain Halle to the intimate rooms of
the ancient cottage of La Cerisaie, you will discover different
historical sites that are typical of the architecture in le Gers
and the South of France.
The occupation of spaces not normally open to the
public is a highlight of the Festival, which is conceived as a
journey across the town of Lectoure, its patrimonial sites, and
contemporary art.
Centred’artet
photographie
AncienTribunal
LaCerisaie
LaHalle
EcoleJean-FrançoisBladé
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Inauguration
The first weekend of the festival will be on the 18th and 19th of July.
Events programm :
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Free opening of exhibitions
Press visit with the curator and all the artists
Performance, talks and festive evening
Events during the festival
During the festival, several events are programmed, including :

Guided tours in French (every Tuesday,
Thursday, Saturdays and sundays)
Guided tours in English and Dutch are
available. Please contact us for more
details.

Nocturnal openings every Monday in La
Halle when the exhibition is free and open
until 11pm.

Musical guided tour throughout August

Workshops for children every Friday.

A Cinema programme will feature a series
of films related to the exhibition, to be
screened in Lectoure’s cinema, Le
Sénéchal.
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Centred’artetphotographiedeLectoure
Le Centre d’art et photographie de Lectoure (CAPL) is dedicated to exhibitions,
artistic production and experimentation, encounters and exchanges, research and
reflection. With a focus on the role of photography in artistic practice, the Centre
presents a wide range of lens-based work and explores the role of the image in
contemporary society.
Situated in the rural region of le Gers, it is unique in its focus and pastoral location.
It is an active participant in the international network of institutions dedicated to the
visual arts. CAPL supports the development of new forms of art by presenting
exhibitions to a large general public.
Le Centre d’art et photographie de Lectoure is generously supported by :
Ministère de la culture et de la
communication (Délégation aux arts
plastiques et DRAC Midi-Pyrénées)
Conseil régional Midi-Pyrénées
Conseil général du Gers
Pays Portes de Gascogne
Ville de Lectoure
Le Centre d’art et photographie de
Lectoure est membre des réseaux
DCA, Diagonal, Air de midi.
The team
Curator : Catsou Roberts
Administration / Coordination : Solenne Livolsi
Project management : Fabrice Bittendiel
Communication : Marie Griffon
Cultural mediation : Dominique Blanc et les étudiants stagiaires
Secrétariat : Claudine Sorrigué
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Information
Dates
From Saturday, 18 July - Sunday, 23 August.
Times
Daily from 2pm to 7pm—except the Ancien Tribunal which closes at 6pm.
Prices
Pass for all exhibitions : 9 €, concession price : 6 €
Pass for one exhibition : 4 €, concession price: 3 €
Concession price: students and disabled people
Free : under 18, art students, press, the unemployed, Lectoure residents
Press
For any enquiries concerning:
-
images
-
attending the press visit with the curator and artists on the 18th of July
-
interviews
-
additional information
Please contact : Marie Griffon, [email protected],
+ 33 5 62 68 83 72
You can find more information on our site and facebook page.
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Access to the festival
By car
From Paris : A-20 to Montauban, then A-62 direction Bordeaux; exit at Valence d’Agen, then Lectoure
via D-953.
From Toulouse : N-124 direction Auch to l’Isle-Jourdain, then direction Fleurance via D-654 and
Lectoure via N-21
From Bordeaux : A-62, exit at Agen, 30 minutes from Lectoure via N-21
By train
Train stations Auch and Agen / Connection by bus SNCF : Agen – Lectoure and Auch – Lectoure
By plane
Toulouse-Blagnac airport, 1h from Lectoure / Agen airport 30 minutes from Lectoure
Exhibition sites
1.
La Halle aux grains
2.
Ancien Tribunal (Hôtel de ville)
3.
Ecole Jean-François Bladé
4.
La Cerisaie
5.
Centre d’art et de photographie
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Accommodation and restaurants
You can find more information on accomadation and restaurants in the tourist office guide .
Remember to dial +33 before calling France, for exemple : +33 562685946 for La Chambre de Diane.
Accommodation
Restaurants
La Chambre de Diane
Le Barbacane
Le Bellevue
23 rue Diane
Tel: 05 62 68 59 46
1 rue Barbacane
55 rue Nationale
Le Rouge-gorge
Café des sports
123 rue Nationale
73 rue Nationale
Le Gourmet
Chocolaterie
Baudequin
La Glycine
20 rue Saint Gervais
Tel : 05 62 68 57 23
Hôtel de Bastard
2 Rue Lagrange
Tel : 05 62 68 82 44
Nadine Medrano
3 rue de la Tour
Tel : 05 62 29 40 61
Tel : 05 62 68 82 44
La Mouline de Belin
Chemin de la fontaine
Saint Michel
Tel : 05 62 28 57 31
L’horloge
101 Rue nationale
Tel : 05 62 28 99 62
Le Clos
87 Rue nationale
Tel : 05 62 68 49 58
29 rue Nationale
13 rue Nationale
L’Imprévu
19 rue Nationale
Cigale é Fourmi
31 rue Nationale
Bar Le Bastion
pl Petit Bastion
32700 LECTOURE
Bar-restaurant le 13
13 rue Alsace Lorraine
L’atelier gourmand
11B rue Nationale
Auberge des
Bouviers
8 rue Montebello
Le Bar du coin
27 rue Nationale
Le Cochon bleu
52 rue Nationale
Le Gourmet
29 rue Nationale
L’Imprévu
19 rue Nationale
Restaurant de
Bastard
2 rue Lagrange
Le p’tit restau de
Gaïa
62 rue Nationale
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